This is one of the best tutorials I have encountered. Your info on the piece and your somewhat 'playful' way of approaching the piece, rather then starting with the first bar is very interesting. Thank you for this helpful and comprehensive lesson.
I chose this for my project piece for my online course. Very helpful! I love the extra thought into making pattern exercises out of sequences from the piece. Wonderful teaching style!
Thank you for a very helpful video. I notice that the right hand part in bars 3 - 5 use fingers 3 & 2 to descend. Is it possible to instead use finger 5 for G, 4 for F#, 3 for E, 2 for D, 1 for C, 3 for B and 2 for A? I would be most grateful for your guidance.
Um ...I think a gavotte and a rigaudon may well have essential features in common. 18th century composers invariably organised their music into groups of dances. Perhaps one copyist titled it Gavotte, another Rigaudon somewhere along the line.
This is one of the best tutorials I have encountered. Your info on the piece and your somewhat 'playful' way of approaching the piece, rather then starting with the first bar is very interesting. Thank you for this helpful and comprehensive lesson.
Thank you so much Peter for your lovely positive feedback. I'm so pleased you enjoyed the video.
Julian you are awesome. This tutorial was so helpful in untangling this. Best wishes for an happy healthy new year
I chose this for my project piece for my online course. Very helpful! I love the extra thought into making pattern exercises out of sequences from the piece. Wonderful teaching style!
Thx Eileen, so pleased you found this helpful.
Thank you Julian. I have a pupil doing this. I seemed to have it on course. Phew!
Thank you for a very helpful video. I notice that the right hand part in bars 3 - 5 use fingers 3 & 2 to descend. Is it possible to instead use finger 5 for G, 4 for F#, 3 for E, 2 for D, 1 for C, 3 for B and 2 for A? I would be most grateful for your guidance.
Yes, it may well be that your find a fingering that works better for you.
Excellent! Very good and useful video! hope you can upload more video like this! Thank you very much!
Thx Mimi, all the tutorials are at www.julianlambert.org
Can i ask you? In my book name of the piece is rigadoon. Can you explain what is correct?
Um ...I think a gavotte and a rigaudon may well have essential features in common. 18th century composers invariably organised their music into groups of dances. Perhaps one copyist titled it Gavotte, another Rigaudon somewhere along the line.
@@JulianLambert I think it's that.